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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

China’s war on smog, risk, taking edge off Asia’s growth sprint

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HONG KONG: Growth in China’s manufacturing output slowed in October, threatening to chill activity across Asia, as tough steps to reduce air pollution forced factories to reduce production and a crackdown on financial risk-taking weighed on smaller firms.


While business surveys on Wednesday suggested Asia’s export-driven expansion still has legs, the readings are starting to reflect signs of fatigue after an impressive sprint so far this year, suggesting regional economic growth has peaked.


Still, barring any unexpected shocks, most analysts expect the global economy will remain on a roll for one more year, even if China sees a gradual loss of momentum.


In the West, similar preliminary surveys last week looked solid enough not to derail plans by Federal Reserve to gradually reduce its balance sheet and by the European Central Bank to slow bond buying.


The Bank of England may raise interest rates for the first time since 2007 on Thursday despite the Brexit shock.


Taken together, the recent data points to global economic growth of around 3.5 per cent this year, analysts at Capital Economics said, adding the world economy should be able to sustain that rate in 2018.


In China, a private survey showed manufacturing output rising at the weakest pace in four months in October and companies continued to shed staff despite a slight pick-up in domestic and export orders.


The Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Manager’s Index (PMI) was unchanged from September’s reading of 51.0, and in line with forecasts. But production growth slowed markedly, nearing the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction.


Similar Purchasing Manager’s Index surveys in Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, Vietnam and India also suggested growth was starting to fade, while activity in Malaysia contracted.


“We expect (China’s) growth momentum to weaken in the coming months as the drags from slower credit growth, reduced fiscal support post-Party Congress and the environmental crackdown all intensify,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard, China economist at Capital Economics.


The Caixin China report followed a similar official survey on Tuesday which pointed to an unexpected cooldown in the manufacturing sector in the face of a weakening property market and a crackdown on smog, which is forcing some steel mills and factories in the northeast to curtail or halt production.


China’s economy has surprised with growth of nearly 7 per cent this year, driven by a renaissance in its “smokestack” industries, such as steel.


It is now almost sure to surpass the official target of around 6.5 per cent.


But property and construction activity, two key growth drivers, are feeling the weight of government measures to cool the heat in the housing market.


Higher borrowing costs are also hurting some firms as regulators clamp down on riskier forms of lending.


Officials speaking at a twice-a-decade Communist Party congress last month emphasised a shift in focus to high-quality rather than high-speed growth and alluded to further efforts to contain excessive risk-taking in the financial system, sending 10-year Chinese government bond yields to their highest in three years.


“The Caixin PMI reflects companies that are smaller in scale and they are at the centre of the deleveraging reform,” said Iris Pang, Greater China economist at ING. “I don’t think this is a one-off.”


Strong global demand for electronics has fuelled solid economic and corporate profit growth this year in Asia’s tech-oriented exporters: South Korea, Taiwan and Japan.


Taiwan reported its fastest quarterly growth in 2-1/2 years on Tuesday as it benefits from growth in more advanced technologies and the rollout of new smartphone models such as Apple Inc’s iPhones and other tech gadgets.— Reuters


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